no
ONE WORD. *ehem* Yes. But ONLY the person your saying it to.
A boy has his Bar Mitzvah at age 13.
Werewolves do not actually exist, so if a person claims to be a werewolf, the cure is simply to realize that they are not actually a werewolf. According to mythology, you can kill the one that bit you in the first place, you can exhaust yourself (historically might have been a way of getting a lot of free work out of an unfortunate person), injection of extract of monkweed, etc.
A person may be asked to participate in the Bar Mitzvah ceremony by performing an honor or something similar, but this participation is known well in advance of the Bar Mitzvah. The synagogue will not put any person on the spot to perform some aspect for the Bar Mitzvah.
yes
Any Jewish person may study to read the Torah. There is no special title for this. This is actually one definition of a "bar mitzvah" (or "bat mitzvah" as well, in non-Orthodox congregations).Answer:The person who reads the Torah is called the baal korei (Reader).
phill jordan
The literal meaning of bar mitzvah is "The age of law", which means that from this age on the young adult is obligated in all the laws of Judaism. For boys this is the age of 13 (bar mitzvah) and for girls 12 (bas mitzvah).
They have Bar Mitzvah ceremonies for boys & Bat Mitzvah ceremonies for girls.
Same as a vampire = bitten by another werewolf and left for dead.
NEVER!
This is actually a common misconception. When a Jewish male turns 13 he is considered to be an adult in regard to taking on the religious responsibilities of an adult Jewish male. This happens on his 13th birthday when he is a 'bar mitzvah'. When he turns 13 he reads from the Torah publicly for the first time and this is associated with his being a bar mitzvah. The ceremony doesn't make the person a bar mitzvah, it celebrates his being a bar mitzvah.